This story was updated
at 5:31 p.m. EST.
WASHINGTON --- Space Exploration (SpaceX) Technologies' third attempt to launch the Falcon 1
rocket on its maiden flight has been pushed back roughly 24 hours to Friday, Feb.
10 to allow for more tests.
"We're
preparing to stop and test just to verify that everything is running at 100
percent," said Elon Musk, founder of the El Selgundo,
California-based SpaceX, in a telephone interview
from the firm's Kwajalein Atoll launch site on the
Pacific Ocean. "It's a reliability measure."
SpaceX spokeswoman Dianne Molina said
Tuesday that Friday's launch window extends from 4:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. EST
(2100-0300 Feb. 11 GMT).
"As an additional reliability measure, SpaceX will conduct a full test of vehicle systems,
including initiating the flight countdown autosequence
and briefly firing the main engine on the launch stand," SpaceX
announced Monday in a statement posted on its website. "This test will take
place Thursday, February 9 (California
time)."
"Assuming we don't see anything
critical, then we'll proceed for a Friday launch,"
Musk added.
SpaceX has made two previous
attempts to launch the Falcon 1 from the company's private launch facility on Omelek Island in the Kwajalein
Atoll region of the equatorial Marshall Islands. A Dec.
19 attempt, the most recent, had to be called off when the Falcon 1's first
stage sustained structural damage while being partially drained of fuel during
a countdown hold due to high winds.
SpaceX has since replaced the damaged
first stage with a new one sent from El Segundo.
SPACE.com's Tariq Malik contributed to this
report from New York City.